Benito Pérez Galdós: A Comprehensive Overview

Benito Pérez Galdós

Recognition of His Work

Galdós’s work is characterized by a marked and sharp realism. A keen observer with brilliant insight, he captures the atmosphere of environments and situations, painting portraits of places and characters. His use of language to identify his characters has sometimes led to accusations of vulgarity, but Galdós’s charm lies in the sense of spontaneity and vitality conveyed through an expressive, flexible, and suggestive style. The number of his works adapted

Read More

Medieval Spanish Literature: Poetry, Prose, and Novels

Medieval Spanish Literature

1. The Romance

1.1 Definition and Features

Ballads are anonymous narrative poems intended to be sung. They are typically composed of eight-syllable verses with assonance, though variations in verse length exist (nine, seven, and six syllables).

1.2 Old and New Ballads

Old ballads are documents from the late Middle Ages and mid-16th century, a period of great popularity for the form. Due to their anonymity and oral transmission, they are difficult to date. The oldest known

Read More

Spanish Literature of the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

Spanish Society of the Late Nineteenth Century

In 1898, Spain’s last colonies—Cuba, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico—gained independence. This military defeat, known as the Disaster of 1898, provoked a deep crisis of the collective consciousness and a generalized feeling of decline. Young intellectuals of the middle classes denounced social injustice, Spain’s backwardness, and the selfishness of the dominant oligarchy (upper class). These intellectuals critiqued the bourgeoisie, whose values

Read More

Spanish Literature from 1940 to 1970

The lyric from 1940 to 1970

During this period, there are circumstances that contribute to a literary vacuum: the death earlier poetry (Lorca, Machado …), imprisonment and exile (Alberti, Cernuda).
Despite this, the lyric is one of the most prolific genres of the time. Since the Civil War until the end of the dictatorship was followed different trends regarding the political transformations gift. Miguel Hernandez made a bridge between the Generation of ’27 and the lyricism of postwar nation in

Read More

Spanish Renaissance Literature: A Golden Age

History and Society

Charles I (1st Half of the 16th Century)

Son of Juana la Loca (who inherited Castile and Aragon) and Philip the Fair (who inherited the Netherlands), Charles I became Emperor appointed by the Pope. His arrival in Spain brought a strong humanistic culture, marking the assimilation of humanism into Spanish society. The discovery of America shifted trade from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic.

Philip II (2nd Half of the 16th Century)

The Lutheran movement expanded, leading to Protestantism.

Read More

Medieval & Renaissance Poetry: From Troubadours to Humanism

Troubadour Poetry and Latin Verse (9th-12th Centuries)

Religious and Secular Latin Poetry

During the Middle Ages, Latin held a prominent place alongside vernacular languages in religious and secular poetry. From the 9th to the 12th centuries, a significant portion of poetry was dedicated to the Church. However, a form of Latin lyrical realism also existed, thanks to the Goliardos (clerics who compiled poems and songbooks).

Lyrical and Popular Traditional Romance

Evidence suggests a vibrant tradition

Read More